I take mine to the shop I bought it from every year for a polish and clean. They take it away to the workshop and for £30 comes back brand new and sparkling. The stones are beaming and you never get that with any cleaning solution It is just like new and it is worth the money!
At Sears in the hardware department they sell a package of what is called Jewelers rouge. There are three sticks one red, one brown and one black. Use the black one if the scratches are fine. It works best if you slightly warm the jewelery up.. not heated, just warm… wipe some of the rouge onto a soft cotton flannel and rub. If the scratches are deeper try the next stick of rouge. The package does indicate which stick is for what variance of buffing you need.
Buy a liquid they sell in hardware shops specially for that, it’s a kind of thick like cream type of paste. Rub it in with a cotton cloth.
If they don’t go because scratches are too deep, try first with superfine sandpaper, rinse, then polish with liquid again. If still they are not gone, use a slightly less fine sandpaper first. Always in order, from rough to smooth, rinsing in between.
they sell polishing compound to take care of that, check with a jeweler.
Take it to your local jewellers, they’ll buff all the scratches away.
I take mine to the shop I bought it from every year for a polish and clean. They take it away to the workshop and for £30 comes back brand new and sparkling. The stones are beaming and you never get that with any cleaning solution It is just like new and it is worth the money!
Take it to a jewelry store and they can clean it and maybe help you. They do not charge anything for cleaning.
At Sears in the hardware department they sell a package of what is called Jewelers rouge. There are three sticks one red, one brown and one black. Use the black one if the scratches are fine. It works best if you slightly warm the jewelery up.. not heated, just warm… wipe some of the rouge onto a soft cotton flannel and rub. If the scratches are deeper try the next stick of rouge. The package does indicate which stick is for what variance of buffing you need.
I’m assured from a highly reliable source that white toothpaste is the best and safety way to clean white gold.
Rub it in and wipe it off.
use an angle grinder and a metal disc.
Buy a liquid they sell in hardware shops specially for that, it’s a kind of thick like cream type of paste. Rub it in with a cotton cloth.
If they don’t go because scratches are too deep, try first with superfine sandpaper, rinse, then polish with liquid again. If still they are not gone, use a slightly less fine sandpaper first. Always in order, from rough to smooth, rinsing in between.
T-cut for cars that might work